Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
1998
DRAMA
2 UNIT
(40 Marks)
Time allowedOne hour and a half
(Plus 5 minutes reading time)
DIRECTIONS TO CANDIDATES
547
SECTION I
DRAMA AND THEATRE IN AUSTRALIAN
SOCIETIES AND CULTURES
(20 Marks)
Attempt ONE question.
All questions are of equal value.
(Aboriginal performance) is our voice, our perspective. We are not being interpreted, we
are telling you how it is.
Adapted from RHODA ROBERTS, Artistic Director of the Festival of the Dreaming
In what ways does the Aboriginal theatre you have studied tell how it is for black
Australians? In your answer, refer to TWO plays from the set texts.
OR
(b)
Aboriginal theatre has developed into a vibrant art form that educates people to see the
value in different ways of living and thinking.
Discuss this statement, with reference to TWO plays from the set texts. In what ways do
these plays in performance excite and challenge the audience?
3
QUESTION 2. Theatre in Education
EITHER
(a)
Most Theatre in Education performances are designed with a minimal set and few props.
Referring to at least ONE of the Theatre in Education plays you have studied, discuss what
would be lost and/or gained by the use of a more complex staging.
OR
(b)
4
QUESTION 3. State or Regional Theatre Companies
EITHER
(a)
(b)
The Australia Council aims to encourage work that contributes to the development of
Australian theatre by exploring not only new content but also new processes, forms, or
audiences.
How has the state or regional company you have studied tried to be innovative in one or
more of these ways?
5
QUESTION 4. Australian Theatre 19651975
EITHER
(a)
The Nimrod Theatre in Sydney, and La Mama and the Pram Factory in Melbourne, were
all rough theatre spaces.
What impact did such new theatre spaces have on the writing and performance of plays
and the expectations of audiences. In your answer, refer to at least TWO of the plays you
studied.
OR
(b)
The new theatre of the late 1960s and early 1970s reflected the spirit and concerns of its
timein performance style and contentbut it has little relevance now.
Discuss this statement, referring to at least TWO of the plays set for study.
A typical heroine in Australian melodrama could ride, shoot, and swim. She did not faint,
and was seldom in danger of a fate worse than death.
Discuss this statement in relation to the presentation on stage of Bubs and Clarice in
The Sunny South and Aileen in Robbery Under Arms.
OR
(b)
In the nineteenth century the artificial conventions of the stage were employed to engage
the audience in real emotional and moral issues.
Discuss this statement, with reference to BOTH The Sunny South AND Robbery Under
Arms.
6
QUESTION 6. Louis Nowra
EITHER
(a)
What is important in Nowras plays is not the overall plot but the sequence of brief
images, incidents, and events from which the plays are constructed.
Discuss this statement, with reference to at least TWO of the plays set for study.
OR
(b)
What happens in the present is the product of what happened in the past.
Referring to at least TWO of the plays set for study, discuss how Nowra contrasts
theatrical images of an older world with images suggesting a new world.
7
QUESTION 7. Women and Contemporary Theatre
EITHER
(a)
Any woman you bring onto the stage will be seen first as someone to be looked at before
she can be thought of as someone who can be taken seriously.
Discuss this statement, with reference to the work of the performer AND the characters
in the play you have studied.
OR
(b)
In what ways can the work of the performer AND the playwright you have studied be
seen to explore stereotyped images of women?
Women performers:
Robyn Archer
Wendy Harmer
Justine Saunders
Ruth Cracknell
Women playwrights:
Linda Aronson, Dinkum Assorted
Alma de Groen, The Rivers of China
Dorothy Hewett, The Chapel Perilous
Hannie Rayson, Falling from Grace
SECTION II
DRAMA AND THEATRE IN SOCIETIES AND CULTURES
OTHER THAN AUSTRALIAN
(20 Marks)
Attempt ONE question.
All questions are of equal value.
9
QUESTION 8. (Continued)
EITHER
(a)
(b)
Shakespeares plays were not universalhis ideas, themes and values rely on modern
theatrical interpretations to make them relevant.
Discuss this statement, referring to modern performances of Shakespeares plays. In your
answer, refer to at least TWO of the plays set for study.
10
QUESTION 9. Caryl Churchill
EITHER
(a)
(b)
In Churchills plays, the personal lives of individuals are seen to derive meaning from
their social and political relations and, in turn, to shape the social whole.
Discuss the techniques Caryl Churchill uses to explore the impact of society on the
individual character.
Greek tragedies were part of a religious festival and often contained religious rituals
within the action.
Discuss how the festival context, the staging and the content of Antigone and The
Bacchae reflect the importance of ritual.
OR
(b)
How did Sophocles and Euripides explore the destructive consequences of human actions
in the performance conventions and content of Antigone and The Bacchae?
11
QUESTION 11. Peter Brook
EITHER
(a)
How have Peter Brooks productions used actual experiences in the theatre space, as well
as illusions, to achieve their effect?
In your answer, refer to his productions of Marat/Sade and EITHER King Lear OR
A Midsummer Nights Dream.
OR
(b)
Peter Brooks productions provide rich theatrical experiences using very simple theatrical
means.
Discuss this statement, with reference to Marat/Sade and EITHER King Lear OR
A Midsummer Nights Dream.
(b)
Dario Fo writes in the Italian theatre tradition, where the central figure has always been
the performer rather than the writer.
Discuss this statement in relation to TWO of the plays set for study.
12
QUESTION 13. Augusto Boal
EITHER
(a)
As the most important element of the theatre is the human body, this book is concerned
with physical movements, distances, volumes, relations . . . but it is not a recipe book.
Discuss the importance of the games and exercises in Boals Games for Actors and
Non-actors to the theory and practice of his Theatre of the Oppressed.
OR
(b)
Boals basic philosophy is in sympathy with the oppressed and the belief in humanitys
ability to change.
What similarities and differences do you see in the ways he deals with political and
personal oppression?
The use of lazzi to give life to a performance suggests that the other conventions of the
Commedia dellarte were flawed.
Discuss this statement.
OR
(b)
The actors had at their disposal a range of stock elements that they could call upon to give
the impression of onstage improvisation.
Discuss the balance between improvised theatre and stock elements in the Commedia
dellarte.
End of paper